Authors: Jennifer A. Davids
Mrs. Kirby looked at her brother-in-law. “Where are Rebecca and Joseph, Daniel? I thought they would be here.”
“They’ll be here tomorrow. In fact, I have good news from both of them.” He rose from his seat, picked up the picture of his children on the mantel, and smiled down at it. Looking at his brother, he said, “I’m sorry to beat you to this, Jonah, but Rebecca wrote to tell me that I should be a grandfather in the spring.”
Amid exclamations of happiness, Jonah joined his brother at the mantel and hugged him. Peter glanced at Anne; her smile was strained. His heart ached for her. He fervently hoped the professor’s crazy plan worked. Even if it took him his whole life, he was determined to make sure that look never crossed Anne’s face again. Dr. Kirby spoke, and Peter turned his attention to him.
“As for my news about Joseph—” He took a deep, steadying breath. “As you know, after Katherine passed he felt it would be too hard to stay and attend college here in Ohio.” The professor’s beard bristled as he pressed his lips together. “But it seems he misses his mother even more keenly living so far away from home. He has decided to attend The Ohio State University, starting next term.”
Peter offered his congratulations along with everyone else, but even over the noise, he heard a sigh beside him. He set his jaw.
You’ll be here to see him
,
Anne. With me standing right at your side.
The merriment died down, and Dr. Kirby looked at him. If Peter had been nervous and unsure of this before, he wasn’t now.
“I have more good news,” the professor said. “It concerns a young man whom it has been my pleasure to know for the past several months.” Peter felt uncomfortable as Dr. Kirby looked him straight in the eye. “He introduced himself to me as Peter Ward, but I have discovered his real name is Peter Tobias McCord.”
Peter felt as if a horse had kicked him in the gut. In a daze, he looked around at them. Dr. Kirby, his brother, and his sister-in-law appeared calm, but the others looked confused, Anne most of all. The mantel clock struck the hour, and a carriage pulled up outside. Silently, the professor left the room. He returned, bringing someone with him. Peter’s jaw dropped, and he stood.
“Jimmy!” he exclaimed.
H
ello, sir.” The valet smiled and crossed the parlor to shake Peter’s hand. “Actually my name is James Brooks.” He glanced at the professor. “I’m a Pinkerton agent.”
“What?” Peter exclaimed. “Who were you working for? My uncle?”
Dr. Kirby laid his hand on Peter’s shoulder and urged him to sit. “Just listen to him.”
Peter looked at the professor as he sat down. “You’ve heard this, then?”
“Yes. All of it.”
Peter pressed his lips together and ran his hands through his hair in frustration. “I never wanted anyone to know,” he said angrily. “It was all in the past.”
“I had to know who you were for reasons that you don’t understand yet. Please hear Mr. Brooks out.”
Peter sighed and looked at James.
“Your grandfather hired the agency,” James said calmly, “to watch over you.”
“To watch over me? Why?”
“He’d been getting death threats.”
Peter frowned and stared at James. “He never told me.”
“He didn’t want to worry you. The threats began years ago, while you were at Princeton, but he never took them seriously until one of them mentioned you. That’s when he called us in. He knew you’d never agree to have a bodyguard around all the time, so that’s why I posed as your valet.”
“He didn’t ask for anyone for himself?”
“No, you were his main concern.”
“Then his illness—” Peter began.
“Unfortunately, the threats were not unfounded,” James replied heavily.
Peter worked his jaw. “Who?” he asked, although in his heart, he already knew.
“Your uncle, with the help of your cousin Edward, slowly poisoned him. They also changed his will. Mr. Jamison, your grandfather’s lawyer, helped with that.” James pulled out some documents from his suit and handed them to Peter. “I found your grandfather’s real will. Your uncle, your cousin, and Mr. Jamison have been arrested.”
Peter slowly opened the will. It was the exact opposite of the document his uncle had shown him in May. As Granddad had always said, he left Peter nearly everything. An annuity had been set up for Uncle Randall and his family. He understood what had motivated Uncle Randall and Edward. They’d wanted the entire McCord fortune, not a yearly stipend. But what had motivated Mr. Jamison? Granddad had trusted him explicitly. Letty came to mind, and he looked at James. “How does Letty Jamison fit in to all this?”
A scowl crossed James’s face. “It seems she did get herself in the family way, but your cousin Edward was responsible. Mr. Jamison took the matter to your uncle, who agreed to have Edward marry her,
if
the attorney changed your grandfather’s will.”
“But once he’d done it, Edward refused to marry her,” Peter said.
“Mr. Jamison threatened to reveal the whole thing unless they provided a husband for his daughter. So they took advantage of your way with the ladies, hoping to trap you into marrying her.” James grinned. “You leaving
before
the wedding complicated their plans, but I’m glad you got away.”
Peter looked down, wishing James hadn’t put it quite like that. What must Anne think of him now?
“What happened to Miss Jamison?” Mrs. Kirby asked.
“After Mr. McCord left, his uncle paid Mr. Jamison to keep quiet, and she was sent away. The child came early, stillborn.”
“The poor girl,” Mrs. Kirby murmured.
James shrugged. “At least, she didn’t get ahold of these.” He handed a velvet box to Peter.
“You found them.” He opened the box to look at his mother’s pearl necklace. He sighed with relief.
“Yes, sir, with the note you left me.” He reached into his pocket. “I also managed to track down these.” He pulled out mother-of-pearl cuff links. “Your trail ended at the pawn shop where I found them.”
“That’s the last time I bet on a sure thing,” Peter said, taking them. He glanced at Dr. Kirby, shame-faced.
“That’s who you used to be, Peter. Not who you are now.” He nodded to James. “Please give him the letter, Mr. Brooks.”
Peter looked up at them. “What letter?”
“Your grandfather left a letter for you, sir, to be read when the will was read.” James retrieved an envelope from a pocket inside his coat and handed it to him.
“Peter,” Dr. Kirby said quietly. “I know this seems like an intrusion, but it’s important that you read it out loud.”
Peter hesitated, but seeing the sincere entreaty on the professor’s face, unfolded the letter and cleared his throat.
Dear Peter
,
You are reading this now because I have passed and my legacy is now in your hands. I know that you never were one for business, but I trust your common sense and I am confident you will find an honorable man to run McCord Steel and Ironworks on your behalf.
But that is not the reason I am leaving you this letter. Guilt has a way of lying on a man’s heart like a hot steel beam, and such is the case with me. For your whole life, I have kept a secret from you. Coward that I am, I have never been able to tell you, fearing your anger and what you might do when you found out.
As you know, your mother, Sarah, was my only daughter. She was a great source of joy for me, and I wanted nothing but the best for her. I sent her to the finest finishing schools. She was the most popular young lady in Pittsburgh society. But the War between the States began, and it was then that Sarah strayed from my carefully laid plans for her.
She met a young man by the name of Tobias Kirby, a private in a Union regiment being mustered in Pittsburgh. I do not know the specifics of how they met, but he swept her off her feet. They married secretly after only a few weeks. Eventually he was sent off for service, and when Sarah discovered she was with child, she revealed to me what she had done.
My anger toward your mother was terrible, even more so when
I discovered the Kirbys were no more than farmers in Ohio. I immediately sent her abroad, and when she returned with you, I circulated the story that she had married someone who turned out to be a fortune hunter and divorced her when he discovered he would get no money from me.
By the time you and she arrived back in Pittsburgh, the war was over. Sarah was heartbroken when she learned your father had been killed at Cold Harbor and angry at me for not telling her. We fought, and she left the house only to die in the carriage accident.
I had nothing left of my daughter but you, and afraid the Kirbys would come and take you away, I decided to make sure you never knew about your father’s family. I destroyed the marriage certificate and Tobias Kirby’s effects the Union Army sent me and told you the same story I told everyone else.
As time went on, I could not remain at peace with what I had done, and yet I could not find the courage to tell you the truth. I have since learned the Kirbys are good people, people I should not have been ashamed to call my relations. I am ashamed of my actions, and I can only pray that you, they, and God can forgive me.
I remain your loving grandfather
,
Hiram C. McCord
A second sheet of paper listed the address of the Kirby farm in Delaware. Peter let them both fall to the floor as he lifted incredulous eyes to the professor, who now stood beside his brother in front of the mantel. “This is why you had to find out who I was?” he asked.
The professor nodded. “Toby was our brother,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “When Jonah and I left to fight the war, he was supposed to have stayed behind at the farm to help Ma run the farm. But he always was a headstrong young man. I guess the call to serve wouldn’t leave him alone, and he ran off and joined up. Why he went clear to Pennsylvania, I guess we’ll never know.”
Peter stood up and walked over to them. “But what made you think I was his son?”
“Your eyes,” the professor replied. “You woke up and looked at me with those eyes of yours.”
Confused, Peter looked from him to his brother. Both of them gazed steadily at him, and that was when he saw it—two sets of eyes exactly like his own, as green as a spring meadow.
“I wasn’t positive until I finally got you to shave that beard of yours,” Dr. Kirby said.
“You look just like him,” Mr. Kirby added.
The two embraced him, and Peter felt awestruck that of all the people he could have come across during his days of wandering, the Lord led him to his own family and restored him to them. Dr. Kirby—Uncle Daniel—pulled away and gave his shoulder a squeeze. “There is one more thing you’re forgetting,” he said, nodding toward where Anne sat on the sofa.
Peter started then looked at Jonah. He smiled. “It’s not like you’re related by blood,” he said quietly.
Swallowing, he looked at Anne. She stared at him with saucer-like eyes. Spying the velvet box that contained his mother’s pearls lying on the sofa next to her, he picked them up and sat down facing her. He opened the box, revealing the pearls.
“These belonged to my mother,” Peter said. “I’d be very happy if you wore them on our wedding day.”
He saw the shock in her eyes for only a moment before she fled the room.
Anne shut herself in the sitting room. The news of Peter’s wealth and his true identity had been startling enough, but his proposal left her completely undone. Ever since they’d kissed, she’d fought between running straight into Peter’s arms and telling him everything to leaving in the middle of the night. She shook her head, trying to clear it, and as she did so, the doors to the sitting room opened and Peter walked in. He shut them and flashed her one of his most roguish smiles.
“You left before answering my question.”
Anne stared at him. “I can’t marry you, Peter. I can’t marry anyone.”
He took her by the arms. “That’s ridiculous. Of course you can. You can marry me.”
“No, my father—”
“I told you I don’t care about his condition.”
“You should.” Anne pulled away and stood by the window, her back to him. “He’s not just lost his senses, Peter. He’s a murderer.” She held her breath, waiting for the sound of the sitting room doors opening and Peter walking out the front door.
“I know.”
She whirled around, certain she hadn’t heard right. “You know? But—but how?”
He walked over to her. Reaching into the breast pocket of his jacket, he pulled out two letters and held them up in front of her. “I found these in Spice’s stall.”
She stared at the letters then took them from his hand. With everything that had happened, she’d never realized they were gone.
“I showed them to Uncle Daniel, and he told me everything. Your father wasn’t in his right mind when he killed your mother and your pa’s neighbor.” He pulled her into his arms. “You’ve been running down the wrong path, Anne. God wants to lead you to green pastures and beside still waters. And if you search your heart, I think you’ll find me right there alongside you.”
Anne thought she couldn’t stand the joy she felt as she finally let into her heart what God had been trying to tell her for so long. But it was quickly tempered by her next thought, and she raised apprehensive eyes to his.